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CROWN OF FIRE
by Ed Greenwood
Sequel to the Best-Selling Novel 'Spellfire'
The action of this novel occurs in the Year of the Prince (1357 Dalreckoning), immediately after the
novel 'Spellfire', and before the Coming of the Gods.
Prologue
Something flashed as it moved - aye, there! Brann stepped up to the grassy crest of the hill where his
flock was pastured and looked east, shading his eyes against the bright forenoon sun. Whatever was
moving caught the light again, flashing against the dark, tree clad lower slopes of the mountains
opposite him. Out of habit, Brann looked quickly around at his flock, counting without thought. He
found nothing amiss and peered back to the east again, looking for that moving glint to show itself
again.
The mountains stood high and dark, like a row of stone giants frowning down on easternmost Cormyr.
The "Thunder Peaks", men called them, named for the fierce storms that often rolled and broke among
them. They were hard and grim and splendid, and sometimes Brann just sat and watched them for
hours.
Much as he was watching them now. They towered over him like a dark, many-spired fortress wall,
forever hiding Sembia from the high meadows where he stood. Rich, splendid Sembia, a land where fat
merchants lay at ease among piles of gold coins, glittering like that spot on the mountains. Ships full of
coins from all over the Realms - even far, sinister Thay, where wizards kept slaves, came to its shores
every day.
He'd not always be just a shepherd. Someday he'd go to Sembia's docks and meet with adventure,
Brann promised himself... not for the first time. He sighed at that thought, shook his head with a wry
smile, and glanced about at the sheep again. His count was right, and none of them was straying,
shifting, or even looking particularly awake. Brann stared at the sheep in growing exasperation. They
ignored him, as usual. Oh, for a little excitement! Nothing here seemed amiss-also as usual. He sighed
again, and looked east.
The sky was bright and clear, and every boulder and stand of trees on the familiar flanks of the Peaks
was as it had always been, unchanged-except ...
Except for that little winking flash of light, far away over the rolling, grass-clad hills near the Gap.
Something shone back the sun at him again, something descending through the high meadows, where
he spent most days alone with his flock It was something - or someone-that wore or carried metal. It
wasn't on the road through the Gap, so it couldn't just be another trading wagon hung with pots and
pans. Perhaps it was a knight of Cormyr, perhaps even one of the Dragon Knights, who were the
personal swordguard and messengers of Azoun, the Purple Dragon, king of all this land. With
quickening interest, Brann watched for another flash.
There it was again. Metal, surely, and bobbing in short, choppy moves - so it wasn't a horse, or
someone riding. It looked ... as if some splendid knight in gleaming armor were marching afoot across
the hills toward him.
Brann leaned on his staff and shaded his eyes for a better view. Then his mouth fell open. A dwarf - a
real dwarf, with an axe and a beard and a mail shirt, and all! Brann stood frozen in wonder. A tiny
voice inside him chuckled at his awe and reminded him that this was what he'd wished for. Adventure
was striding to meet him, after all. Staggering, actually. The dwarf stumped along on one side of a girl
who was being carried, and a slim young man struggled along on the other. The dwarf was bearing
most of the girl's weight on his broad shoulders, but he was so much shorter than the man that the two
were having trouble moving straight forward with their burden. "Keep on, lad," Delg grunted. "There's
a guard post not far ahead ... two hills ahead, and we should see it." Sweat dripped from the dwarf's
dusty beard as he spoke.
Narm nodded grimly, saving all his breath for carrying his lady. Shandril was slim and shorter than
most; she couldn't be this heavy. She hung loose between them, senseless. Narm stumbled, caught
himself with a wordless hiss of apology to Delg, and shook his head impatiently; stinging sweat had
run down into his eyes again. He looked ahead-and stiffened. Through the blurring of sweat he saw
dark, moving blobs on the grassy hills ahead. "'Ware-" he panted.
"They're sheep, lad," the dwarf said dryly. "Right dangerous, if ye're a clump of grass, I suppose. Aye?
just sheep."
Narm shook his head wearily. His legs felt hollow and weak, his strength draining out of them with
every step. He had to-to rest. "Stop, Delg just a breath," he panted, wiping sweat away with his sleeve.
"Just a--"
"No," the dwarf said in tones of cold iron. "If you stop now, boy, you'll never get on again in time.
They'll catch up with us and run us down out here like boar, and Shan will have cooked twenty-odd
Zhents in vain. Keep moving! We're almost there."
Brann watched, astonished, as the bristle-bearded dwarf in armor and the young man in mage robes
staggered past him, panting under the weight of the girl they carried. Her long reddish-gold hair
dangled along one limp arm as they strode doggedly and unevenly on, up the last hill before the village.
Brann looked east again, a view he knew very well. There was no sign of anyone following them. He
turned and stared curiously at the sweat-darkened back of the young wizard as the strangers went over
the hill and began to descend out of sight.
His mouth was suddenly dry. His hands, as they dipped to his belt, trembled; he almost dropped the
horn. So this is excitement, he thought. Brann shook his head, and blew. The horn call wavered and
then grew steady, high, and clear.
The high song of a shepherd's horn was ringing off the walls of houses as the three tired adventurers
came down into Thundarlun. Before them rose the watchful stone bulk of the guardhouse, where Delg
had known it would be. On benches along its wall, Purple Dragon soldiers sat alert, watching with
interest in their eyes as the three approached.
DeIg guided Narm down onto the dusty road, and the soldiers frowned and rose, catching up halberds
from where they leaned against the guardhouse wall. One shouted into the building as the weary
travelers came close enough to see wary faces and ready weapons. A Purple Dragon with a hard face
and a gray mustache appeared from within and strode out into the road to block their way. The sword
of a guardcaptain gleamed high on the shoulders of his surcoat.
"Halt, travelers!" His voice was deep and level, but not unfriendly. "You seem in some trouble and are
come to Cormyr, Realm of the Purple Dragon. State your names and what you seek here."
Delg looked up at him and silently and imperiously gestured at a soldier to approach. The man glanced
toward his commander. The guardcaptain appraised the dustcovered dwarf and then nodded. Holding
his halberd warily, the soldier stepped closer.
Delg shifted the limp girl he held into Narm's grasp, staggering just a bit as the burden left him. Under
her full weight, the young wizard sank to his knees in the dust. The soldier moved to help; Delg
ignored them both. Keeping his hands well
away from his axe, the dwarf strode forward to confront the
Cormyrean commander. His beard jutted defiantly as he looked around at all of the guards, raising his
hand to show them its emptiness before reaching slowly to his throat. He drew something out from
under his mail, something that hung from a silver neck-chain, and cupped his hand around it as he
showed it to the Purple Dragon guardcaptain.
The man frowned down at it, and then slowly raised his eyes to meet the dwarf's steady gaze. They
looked at each other for a long, silent moment, and then the guardcaptain waved to the soldiers on his
right. "Take her in, fast." He added, to Delg, "Our wizard's within."
Shandril's head swam. The light had changed; she was inside a building somewhere, being bumped and
scraped along a rough stone passage and through a door. Then hard, smooth wood was under her. She
slumped down on the seat, too exhausted to even be thankful, and heard the soldiers who'd brought her
here go out again, swordscabbards clanging against stone. Then she saw the flickering blue glow ahead
and forced herself to focus and be alert. She was in the presence of magic.
As her gaze cleared, she saw a man sitting at a table in front of her - a stout, fussy-looking man with a
wispy beard. He seemed to be alone in this gloomy, bare stone room. Alone until she arrived. He was
looking irritably over his shoulder at her, a shoulder that bore the purple robes of a war wizard of
Cormyr. The flickering blue radiance - the only light in the room-was coming from a thin, gleaming
long sword floating horizontally in the air in front of the wizard.
Shandril let her eyes close to slits and her chin fall to her breast. After a moment, the wizard shrugged
and turned back to the floating blade. Murmuring something to himself, he reached toward the blade
and made a certain gesture. Blue lightning crackled suddenly, coiling and twisting along the gleaming
steel like a snake spiraling around a branch. Then there was a brief, soundless flash, and the reaching,
blue-white tongues of lightning were gone. The wizard nodded and wrote something on a piece of
parchment in front of him.
Then he tugged at his beard for a moment, spoke a single, distinct word Shandril had never heard
before, and made another gesture. This time there was no response from the magical blade. The wizard
made another note.
Delg squinted up at the Purple Dragon commander. "In a breath or two, I'll tell you all that," he said, "if
you've time to listen by then. There's near thirty Zhentilar riding on our heels, they'll be here very
soon."
The commander stared at him, saw that he was serious, and said, "Zhentil Keep? Twill be a pleasure,
Sir Dwarf, to turn them back." He made no move to call his men to arms, but nodded his head at the
guardhouse into which Shandril had been taken. "So speak, what befell?"
Delg turned to look east. His hand glided swiftly to the reassuring hardness of his axe. "She won time
for us to escape, blasting a score of Zhents out of their saddles. Unfortunately, there are more, and all
her, ah, magic is gone."
The captain was not a stupid man. His eyes widened for a moment as the dwarf spoke of magic-
younger than most spell-hurlers, that lass. His eyes narrowed again an instant later as he too turned to
look at the horizon. His face changed, and he shouted, "Down! Ware arrows!"
A hail of shafts answered him, thudding into the turf many paces short of them. Up over the nearest hill
bobbed many darkarmored heads, rising and falling at a gallop. The Zhentilar, riding hard and with
arrows to waste, had come. Faces paled and jaws dropped. Then the men who wore the Purple Dragon
were scrambling for crossbows and cover. As the minstrels of the Dales say, they scarce had time for
last wistful wishes before death swept down on them.
Shandril heard a faint yell, then another. Somehow she found strength and was on her feet, her head
swimming. The world rocked and swayed. There was nothing in her but sick, helpless emptiness.
Sweat glistened on her hands with the effort. She swayed and caught at the back of the wizard's chair
for support.
Astonished and irritated, the mage looked up into her face. She pushed past, leaned on the table for
support, and reached out with weak, trembling fingers. The blade was cold but tingling as she touched
it; trembling with weakness and relief, she felt the magic it bore begin to flow into her."What're you -
that's magic, lass - no - don't!" the wizard blurted. Then he stared in surprise; the blade flashed with
sudden light and seemed to waken. Pulses of radiance ran down it and up the arms of the young girl,
who grasped its hilt in both hands and gasped. She closed her eyes and shuddered as small arcs of
lightning leapt from the blade and spiraled around her.
From outside came sudden tumult: thudding hooves, screams and yells, and then, very near, a horrible,
gurgling moan.The wizard tore his gaze from Shandril just long enough to roll his eyes and snarl,
"What now? Oh, Mystra aid me!" Snatching a wand from his belt, he strode out of the room. What in
the name of all the gods was going on? The sudden reek of something burning came to him as he flung
wide the oaken door of the guardhouse - and stopped in astonishment, again.
Across the threshold, he saw Guardcaptain Ruldel's face twist in pain as he sagged back into the arms
of a young man in mage robes. Many arrows stood out of the dragons on the warrior's surcoat and
shield, and already his armor was dark with blood. Above him stood a dwarf, face grim, bloody axe in
hand. The war wizard goggled at them all from the doorway, frozen in disbelief. As the commander
sank into the boy's arms, he groaned, struggled to speak for a moment, and looked up at the dwarf.
The words came in a rough hiss. "Tell Azoun, I ... we were togeth . . ."The rest was lost forever in a last
rush of blood.
Delg shook his head as he tugged the shield out of the man's lifeless hand; the fool had not even had
time to get it properly on his arm. Now he was past needing it. DeIg crouched, holding the shield-it was
as tall as he was-up to protect Narm. The young mage was drenched with sweat, exhausted from
deflecting far too many arrows with a feeble, invisible magic meant for hanging cloaks on pegs or
fetching small things from across a room. The spell had failed in the end, and Narm barely clung to
wakefulness.
Arrows hissed and hummed past them, reaching hungrily through the air close by ... toward the open
door of the guardhouse. The war wizard stood there, still looking astonished as the shafts tore into him.
Irritation joined puzzlement on his face before he gurgled and toppled slowly sideways, an arrow
through his throat. Errant shafts cracked off the stone wall beside him. There was a barked command
from whence the arrows had come. Through the sudden stillness that followed, one man came riding,
trotting up to confront the young man and the dwarf. The frightened faces of villagers peered from
windows. All around the Zhentilar, the soldiers of Cormyr lay sprawled in blood, pinned down by
many arrows. One warrior hung limply out the open window of a cottage that was already crackling
into rising flames.
As he reined up in front of Delg, the dark-armored Zhentilar swung a drawn long sword lazily through
the air, trailing drops of fresh blood. He looked down at the grim dwarf, over at the sprawled wizard i
n
the guardhouse doorway, and then around at the frightened, watching faces, and his cruel face
brightened in satisfaction. He rose in his saddle with insolent grace and brandished his bloody sword
again.
"Come out, wench!' he bellowed at the open guardhouse door. "Come out, or well burn this village, and
you with it".
A murmur of fear went up. The bewildered folk of Thundarlun could not believe so many strong,
capable Purple Dragons - a soldier for every three villagers could be slain so quickly and easily. In
numb silence, they looked down again at the still forms and the blood. Had the gods forsaken
Thundarlun?
The Zhentilar beckoned impatiently without looking behind him; one of his men obediently rode up
with a blazing torch in hand. With a cold smile, the Zhent swordmaster looked around at the stunned,
fearful faces of the watching villagers. Slowly and deliberately, he wiped his blade on the flank of his
horse-it snorted and shifted under him-and he sheathed it. Then he reached out, took the torch, and
brandished it like a blade, trailing rippling flames through the air. His horse rolled its eyes in fear, the
Zhent pulled back sharply on the reins to prevent it from bolting and swung his new weapon in arcs of
flame. "Come out!" he snarled, or taste fire!"
Silence fell ... and lengthened, hanging heavy on the smoky air. Villagers murmured in fear as the wait
continued, and the swordmaster's face grew stony. He raised the torch and sat his saddle like a statue of
impending doom. The silence stretched. The fire he held on high spat and crackled.
The dwarf stood watching it, eyes narrow and shield raised over the kneeling form of Narm, who had
grown pale and seemed to be having trouble swallowing. And then a slim girl in dusty travel leathers
stood in the doorway. Yellow-white fire seemed to dance around her eyes and hands, blazing like the
torch in the swordmaster's hand.
"You called for me, Zhentilar?" The words were calm and cool, but flames flickered from her lips as
she spoke. At the sight, Zhents and villagers alike murmured and fell back. Then the girl shuddered,
and her face creased in pain. It cleared again. She straightened almost defiantly, looking up at the Zhent